TUC calls for laws to tackle class discrimination

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TUC calls for laws to tackle class discrimination

The TUC has today called for new legal measures to tackle class discrimination in the workplace.

The call comes as a new TUC report reveals that graduates from wealthier backgrounds are more than twice as likely to be on a £30,000 starting salary than those from Workington-class backgrounds.

The TUC wants the government to:

Make discrimination on the basis of class unlawful, just like race, gender and disability

Introduce a legal duty on public bodies to make tackling all forms of class and income inequality a priority

Make it compulsory for employers to report their class pay gaps

The TUC says that without new anti-discrimination laws people from working-class backgrounds will continue to face unfair barriers at work and in society.

These include direct forms of discrimination, such as employer bias during job applications and interviews. And there are indirect forms of discrimination, such as the use of unpaid internships as a gateway into jobs.

As well as class discrimination, the report looks at other forms of disadvantage experienced by working-class people, such as low pay and the greater impact of austerity on working-class households.

The TUC says that stronger workplace rights are needed to counter the class privilege that remains in Britain today. Every worker must have the freedom to meet with a union at their workplace. And there must be stronger rights for workers to speak up on pay and conditions through trade unions.

TUC General Secretary Frances O’Grady said:

“If you’re from a working-class family, the odds are still stacked against you.

“Everyone knows that getting that dream job is too often a case of who you know, not what you know.

“I want to issue a challenge to politicians. It’s high time we banned discrimination against working class people.

“This country is wasting some of our best skills and the talent. And if we don’t get change fast, it’s not just workers who will lose out – Britain will.

“Let’s have a new duty on employers to stamp out class prejudice once and for all.”